
Predestination
and Free Will


This page discusses the way in which human responsibility
interacts with God's responsibility. A proper balance here is
critical to the Christian life. If human responsibility is
overemphasized, Christianity turns into legalism, without an
appreciation for God's power active in our lives. If God's
responsibility is overemphasized, Christianity turns into fatalism,
losing the emphasis on obedience to God and service to others. Both
of these problems have occurred at times.
The orthodox position maintains both of the following:
- God is in charge both of history in general and of our lives. We
are unable to come to know and serve him on our own. We are
completely dependent upon his decision to save us, and his work in our
lives to transform us.
- Humans make responsible decisions. We will be judged by
God for how we respond to him, and how we deal with each other.
As we'll see, there are different approaches to these issues.
Some emphasize either God's responsibility or ours. As long as they
manage somehow to do justice to both, I would consider them orthodox.
However there are positions that are clearly unorthodox:
- Sometimes Christians so emphasize human decision that
they lose sight of our dependence upon God. Christianity then
becomes a demanding moral code, but it loses contact with
Christ's work to redeem people who are unworthy
of it. This tendency is called "Pelagian", after Pelagius,
a monk who was thought to have taught this position.
- Sometimes Christians so emphasize God's responsibility
that they lose sight of the need for our lives to be transformed,
and for us to be active in working with others. I will call
this tendency "fatalism", although Catholics often refer to it
(incorrectly) as Calvinism.
Since about the 5th Cent (when Pelagius was condemned), almost
no one intentionally holds either of these extreme positions.
However they can easily occur in practice, whenever Christians
lose track of the fullness of the Gospel.
This dual emphasis presents an obvious problem: How can our decisions
be responsible if we are completely dependent upon God's decision?
Christians have taken two approaches to this:
- In some way we share responsibility with God. We would be
hopeless without God's initiative; he must initiate our relationship
with him. But his work in our hearts enables us to respond. This is
a free response, although our ability to make it is dependent upon his
work with us. Thus it is possible for us not to respond, or to
respond initially and then reject God. I will refer to this approach
as "synergism". I include it in Arminianism and one end of the
Catholic spectrum. (This is a slightly non-standard use of the term
"synergism", as I will note below.)
- God's decision and ours occur on two different levels. Thus it
is possible for God to be completely responsible for us, but also for us
to make responsible choices. I will refer to this position as
Calvinist, although the most general description is probably
Augustinian. (I am not a scholar of Augustine. There are aspects
of his teaching that suggest the other approach. I am not passing
judgement on his actual intent.)
It's worth noting that there is a spectrum of acceptable views
within the Catholic Church. Two of the major Catholic theologians
(Augustine and Aquinas) held views very close to the one I describe
here as Calvinist. Historically it might be better to call the
position Augustinian. However as a Protestant, I am in a better
position to describe Calvin's version. Other Catholics hold a
position very similar to Arminius. It's my impression that this is
the more common Catholic position.
This area is a difficult one in Protestant/Catholic relations. By
the 16th Cent, doctrine in this area had become quite confused.
Unfortunately no ecumenical council had clarified this area, so there
were no unambiguous standards. The closest was probably the Council
of Orange, in 529. Unfortunately it appears that the results of
Orange had become almost completely lost by the 16th Cent. By the
late medieval period, some Catholic theologians were holding positions
that appeared to be for all practical purposes Pelagian.
The Protestant reformers thought that many of the things they
objected to in current practice could be traced to this de facto
Pelagianism. As a corrective, they adopted an aggressive form of
Augustinianism, which I'm calling Calvinism.
On the Catholic side, the Council of Trent adopted reforms in this
area, which rejected overt Pelagianism. On the Protestant side, views
in this area moderated over time. Indeed in some cases they
eventually became effectively identical to Catholic ones. Even in
their original form, Protestants were never actually fatalists.
However much of the 16th Cent rhetoric involved Protestants
accusing Catholics of being Pelagian and Catholics accusing
Protestants of being fatalists or of failing to require Christians
to obey God's requirements.
While some of the causes have been eliminated, these accusations
have never completely died down. Synergists and Calvinists often do
not see their positions as being two different orthodox approaches.
For example, while Trent did rule out Pelagianism for Catholics, it
also ruled out Calvinism and other Protestant positions. Protestants
have generally returned the favor.
Indeed even those who hold variants within the synergist family
commonly do not acknowledge
any connection with other views that I classify as belonging to the
same family.
This page is organized as follows:
- Introduction (this section)
- Calvinism
- Predestination and Responsibility
- When are people responsible?
- Summary
- Synergism
- Arminianism
- A Common Catholic Position
- Lutheranism
Special Issues:
- Can you be sure?
- How can you preach the Gospel if you believe in Predestination?
Calvinism
I'm now going to review the major positions. I'm going to spend
the most time with Calvinism. That is largely because many of the
ideas involved in Calvinism are the most foreign to 20th Cent
Christians, and thus require the most explanation. I am largely
a Calvinist, in the sense described here.
In the classical Protestant approach, justification is a permanent
thing. It establishes (or is part of)
a reliable relationship within which our sin can
be dealt with. Note that at no point does God require our consent.
Justification is given before we are in any position to respond to
God. It continues even during times when by our sin we have rejected
God. Since it does not require our consent, it would appear that God
determines who is going to be saved when he chooses whom to justify.
This is in fact what the Reformers intended to say. It is based
on a viewpoint going back to Augustine. He believed that the
addictive effect of sin is so serious that we are unable even to give
consent for God to save us. We certainly might say that we want to be
in heaven rather than hell. But we would not seriously desire to give
up our sin, without God already working in us to begin healing us.
Once God has justified us, i.e. forgiven us and grafted us into
Christ, we are on the path of salvation. In some synergist models, it
takes our continuing cooperation to remain in our saving relationship
with God. This is not true of the Reformers. As explained in the
page on the Gospel, in the Protestant
model, all the resources needed to save us come from Christ. Thus any
"cooperation" is a result of God's justification and sanctifying
grace, not a precondition for it to continue.
The Reformers were unwilling to acknowledge that any part of our
salvation depends upon something in us. This is due to their concept
of the seriousness of sin. Suppose God required our free consent
before proceeding. In order to give that consent, some part of our
will has to be free from the effects of sin. [If that part of the
will needs renewal first, then it's not our choice. Our decision
depends upon whether God renews that part of our will.]
This is not just pessimism. It results from serious concerns
about the nature of the Christian life. Protestant piety focuses
entirely upon Christ. He is the source of our strength. All the
resources for salvation are in him. As soon as we make salvation
dependent upon our continued cooperation or consent, we are back with
the Catholic model in which our relationship with God is dissolved by
sin. At the time we most need his help, direct access to his grace is
no longer available.
The Reformers saw Biblical support for these concepts in Romans
(particularly chapters 9 through 11) and Galatians. One could also
cite various passages in John where Jesus speaks of his followers as
if they were a predetermined set of people given to Christ as his
sheep. (This is not intended as a complete review of Scriptural
evidence. It is clear that there is extensive evidence for human
responsibility as well, and alternative exegeses of Romans 9-11 are
possible.)
Calvinism: Predestination and Responsibility
There are several obvious issues raised by the Reformers' idea.
One is called "predestination". If justification does not require our
consent either to establish or maintain, that seems to mean that God
decides who is going to be saved. Anyone that he justifies will end
up saved. If people are not saved, it must be that he didn't decide
to justify them.
This is an issue because Christians believe in human
responsibility. This belief is based on many passages in the Bible,
including Jesus' teachings and other documents. If God decides who is
going to be saved, how can there be any real human responsibility?
Of the things I've seen from the 16th Century, Calvin dealt with
this the most clearly. He maintained that predestination does not
remove human responsibility. In effect, he suggested that there are
two different accounts for the same event, one in human terms and one
in God's terms. God has a plan for our individual lives and history
as a whole. Everything that happens fits into that plan. However he
normally works through secondary causes. When someone does something,
it is because they make a decision to do so. God knew what that
decision would be. Indeed because the person's character,
motivations, and situation is under God's control, there's a sense in
which we can say that God determined the action. But his plan is
carried out by the working out of human decisions and other historical
causes.
Calvin looks at the example of the Sabeans' violence against Job's
household near the beginning of Job. There are three levels of
responsibility here. The Sabeans are responsible for the violence,
motivated by whatever motivates vandals, presumably a desire for
loot. But they are also acting as Satan's agents to test Job. Thus in
another sense Satan is responsible. His goal is to show up Job. He
somehow moved the Sabeans to attack Job's family. However even Satan
is acting accordance with God's plan. God's intention is to vindicate
Job's character and his own justice. The event is completely
intelligible on any of these three levels: human, Satan's plan, and
God's plan. In fact all three accounts are true.
Calvin also points out that God carries out his plan differently
when dealing with people who have faith in him and those who do not.
Everyone ends up acting in accordance with his plans. But with those
who have faith, there is a conscious collaboration. God works with
them through the Holy Spirit, and moves them directly in the way he
intends. The ungodly do not intentionally cooperate with God. They
still do his will, but they do it because he has set up the situation
so that they end up doing what he wants.
Luther expresses this difference by a variant of predestination
that is often called "single predestination". He says that God is
responsible for the salvation of those that he chooses. Those that he
does not choose are responsible for their own damnation. Calvin's
language is more symmetrical. He says that God chooses both those he
will save and those that will not be saved. He intends both results
and is responsible for both. This is called "double predestination."
However there is still a difference in how he works with those who are
saved and those who are not.
I believe "single predestination" and
"double predestination" are different perspectives on the same thing.
Single predestination emphasizes the fact that God regenerates those
whom he elects, and is present with them. He does not have this
direct involvement with others. Double predestination emphasizes
the fact that God chooses both results equally, even though he
is involved differently with those he elects and those he does not.
[Note: while Calvin did in fact say the things I attribute to him,
there are places where he seems to lose sight of the balance described
here. At times he does appear to emphasize God's sovereignty in ways
that would remove human responsibility.]
Calvinism: When are people responsible?
You will often hear arguments that we can't hold people
responsible for what they do if what they do is determined by their
heredity or environment. This is the basis for a lot of the criticism
directed against predestination. If God knows that someone is going
to sin, and in fact if God has overall responsibility for the history
of which this action is a part, then it's God's fault. The person is
being forced to sin, so he is not responsible.
This is probably dealt with most clearly in later writers.
Jonathan Edwards' book "Freedom of the Will" is a classic here.
Edwards points out that there is a confusion here. There are two
ways in which a person's actions can be known in advance. One way is
real force: we threaten to kill them if they do something else, or in
some other way we compel them. The other way is that we know their
character and motivations so well that we can be sure what they are
going to do.
In the first case, we rightly say that the person is not
responsible. Their actions do not reflect their nature, so we can't
reasonably draw any conclusions about them from what they did. In the
second case it's not so clear. The person is not being forced to make
a specific decision. It's just that their nature leads them into
doing it.
Edwards identifies actions as responsible as long as they properly
reflect the person's character and goals. In this case it is quite
possible for a person to be responsible for their actions even though
God is responsible for the history that leads them to be the kind of
person they are.
Edwards's opponents were primarily Arminian. (This viewpoint will
be described below.) The Arminians had a different idea of what makes
an action responsible. They felt that we couldn't say a person was
free (and thus responsible) unless there was something intrinsically
unpredictable in their decision. As long as the decision could be
predicted, they were being forced into it by their background, and it
wasn't free.
Edwards points out that this doesn't make any sense. When
people's actions don't reflect their character and motivations, we
don't call it freedom, we call it insanity.
Christian theology maintains that God can be relied on. We know
that he will always act on the basis of his character and his
covenants with us. Does this mean that he isn't free? I would
maintain that as we become closer to God, we become easier to predict.
Our characters and motivations become more coherent, and our
decision-making more disciplined. Christians historically have seen
this as a growth of freedom.
Since the time Edwards wrote (around the American revolution),
we've had a chance to see the consequences of the two approaches. In
general our culture now accepts the Arminian definition of
responsibility. There is a growing tendency not to hold people
responsible if we can see how their environment affected them. People
can almost always find some way of blaming what they are on something
else. Thus the concept of responsibility is quickly vanishing
altogether, or being applied in incoherent ways. Even Arminians see
this and are disturbed by it. What they don't see is that this
general cultural tendency is a direct consequence of Arminian ideas.
I maintain that we need to return to the concept that people are
responsible as long as their decision properly reflects who they are.
External force or constraint diminishes responsibility. So do medical
conditions that make the decision process not work properly. But the
fact that we know some of the things that made the person who they are
does not reduce their responsibility.
Calvinism: Summary
In summary: Calvinism says that God is wholly responsible for
salvation. God forgives us, engrafts us into Christ, regenerates us,
and moves us through the power of the Holy Spirit.
However this is looking at things from God's perspective. There
is another account, that looks at things from a human perspective.
God normally operates through historical causes. These various influences
shape our character and our goals. However we still make decisions,
for which we are properly held responsible.
The balance of responsibility is somewhat different with those
who are God's children and those who are not. With those who are
saved, God operates in a personal way, through the presence of the
Holy Spirit and our union with Christ. While we make responsible
choices, the basic decision to save us is God's. There is no
equivalent for those who reject God. While their rejection is part of
an overall history for which God is responsible, God does not take
specific actions to make them reject him, as he takes actions to
redeem his children.
Synergism
In this section I'm going to describe two different traditions:
Armianism and one common Catholic position. I believe they
share one characteristic: In one way or another they share
responsibility for our ultimate salvation between God's decisions and
ours.
Synergism: Arminianism
The most common alternative among Protestants today is
Arminianism. Most modern Protestants are Arminian. The most prominent
source of Arminian influence (at least in the U.S.) was John Wesley.
A large fraction of the Protestant churches outside the Lutheran and
Reformed tradition have Wesleyan roots.
Arminians typically use the classical Protestant language,
including justification by faith, imputed righteousness, and the
distinction between justification and sanctification. They differ
from Calvinists primarily in that they believe (1) that God
seriously calls everyone, and (2) that we may refuse grace.
Arminius talks of grace and free will cooperating. But the
cooperation is a result of renewal by grace. Cooperation has
sometimes been used to imply that the fall is not complete, and thus
that man can still contribute something to his salvation. Arminius
uses the term to refer to a response, which can exist only because of
grace.
He seems to use the term because he does not want to refer
salvation either entirely to grace or entirely to man. He does not
want to refer it entirely to grace, because it requires our response.
God deals with us as people, not as an irresistible force. Carl Bangs
summarizes: "Man in sin is unable to exercise his will to do any good
at all except he be regenerated and continually aided by grace. The
grace of God is a gratuitous affection, infusion of the gifts of the
Spirit, and perpetual assistance which is "the commencement, the
continuance, and the consummation of all good," but it is not an
"irresistible force"". ("Arminius", p 313)
Arminius believed that grace can be resisted. "Whomsoever God
calls, he calls them seriously, with a will desirous of their
repentance and salvation." Thus God does not predestine some to
destruction. "The whole controversy reduces itself to this question,
'Is the grace of God a certain irresistible force?' ... I believe that
many persons resist the Holy Spirit and reject the grace that is
offered." Bangs comments "For him grace is not a force; it is a
Person, the Holy Spirit, and in personal relationships there cannot be
the sheer overpowering of one person by another."
All variants of Arminianism would be unacceptable to the
Reformers. Indeed one of Luther's best works was written against
Erasmus, who maintained a position much like Arminius'. Under
Arminianism, humans determine who is saved and who is not, by the way
that they respond to God's grace. This was not acceptable to the
Reformers, because it seemed to ignore the seriousness of sin. They
thought it left a tiny corner of our will that did not need to be
renewed: the corner that decided whether or not to accept God's grace.
Aside from this theoretical concern, they believed that there are
practical problems with Arminianism. The whole Protestant concept of
justification is based on predestination. Recall that in the
classical Protestant position, justification is a permanent thing. It
establishes a relationship with God that continues even through
serious sin. But this only makes sense if the relationship with God
is established unilaterally by God. If we can reject it, then the key
to salvation is within us. It's whatever motivates us to continue
cooperating with God's grace.
Synergism: a Common Catholic Position
Catholics all accept predestination, in one form or another.
However there is a range of permissible positions. Aquinas held a
position that seems to me identical to Calvin's. Other Catholics hold
positions that seem to me rather similar to Arminius'. The official
standard in this area is the Council of Trent. The canons from Trent
include a couple of statements that seem unambiguously Arminian.
E.g. it is stated both that God does not predestine anyone to
damnation, and that the operation of grace can be resisted. However
it is possible to understand these in a sense that is compatible with
Aquinas (and Calvin).
Aquinas uses the term "predestine" to refer to God's action in
moving people to salvation. For those who are not saved, he uses the
term "reprobation." As described above, these are not completely
symmetrical. God does not move people to damnation in the way that he
moves them to salvation. He simply leaves them alone. To say that
God works the same way in both cases would be making God the source of
sin, which no Christian would want to do. Thus one can read Trent as
saying simply that God does not predestine anyone to damnation in
the same sense as he predestines people to salvation. Such an
interpretation is consistent with Aquinas/Calvin.
The statement that the operation of grace can be resisted can be
taken in such a sense as well. It can be taken as a description on
the human level. Calvin certainly agrees that people act as
intelligent beings, with a will. There are people to whom the Gospel
is preached, but they reject it. On the human level, we can say that
they have rejected grace. However when you look at things from the
point of view of God's plan, God's plan included that rejection, as
well as the factors that led the person to reject the Gospel. Calvin
tends to use the term grace only for God's actions to save the elect.
In that use, grace can't be successfully resisted, since when God
chooses to save someone, he makes sure that what he does is sufficient
to overcome any obstacles.
Catholic theology tends to use the term "cooperation" to describe
the human reaction to grace. For many Catholics, this represents a
reaction to God's grace that accepts it, and results in justification.
As a result, whether a person is justified is not solely up to God,
but requires also this cooperation. However the term cooperation can
also be understand in a sense compatible with Aquinas or Calvin. In
this sense it refers to the fact that human beings are not machines.
When God gives grace, he does it in a manner that results in a real
change in the human will, such that the person responds to God. The
elect do God's will intentionally, while those who are not do it
unintentionally. I should note that from Calvin's point of view, this
is part of sanctification, not justification. But Catholic theology
doesn't distinguish these as consistently as Protestant theology.
The 1908 Catholic Encyclopedia reviews the range of Catholic views
in its article on predestination. While this is an
oversimplification, it describes two major types of approach. All
Catholics accept predestination, in that there is a fixed number of
people who will be saved, which God knew from creation. However there
are two different ways God can know it. One is that he first decided
to save a specific set of people, and took the necessary steps. The
other is that he knows how any individual will respond in any
circumstances. So those who are predestined are those who God has
forseen will respond to grace.
The first position is that of Aquinas and Calvin. The second is
very close to Arminius (at least with respect to predestination; as a
Protestant theologian, he disagrees with Catholics on many other
issues). Arminius was willing to use the term predestination, but for
him, predestination was in Christ. That is, God predestined all who
would have faith in Christ to be saved. The Catholic Encyclopedia
regards the second (Arminian) approach as superior, although it
acknowledges that both are acceptable. (Of course it rejects Calvin's
presentation of predestination, but I think there's good reason to
believe that this is a misunderstanding.) My sense is that the great
majority of Catholics take a position that I would classify as
Arminian in terms of its approach to predestination.
So how do Catholics differ from actual Arminians? One major
difference is in the role they attributed to baptism. In baptism, we
are freed from the effects of original sin. Formally, it is baptism
that makes it possible for us to respond to God's grace. This is
referred to as "baptismal regeneration".
With infants this appears to be literally true. With adults, I
would say that there is some qualification. Trent describes the
process of that goes before baptism in terms that are consistent with
Arminianism: God initiates, and we respond. It is expected that the
adult candidate for baptism will have faith and will have repented of
his sins. Thus by the time the act of baptism is performed, it would
appear that at least some of the effects of original sin have already
been overcome.
Thus it is probably best to say that the "grace of baptism" may to
some extent be present before the actual action is performed. This is
supported by the fact that someone who dies while in the process of
preparing for baptism is considered to have the "baptism of intent".
I believe Catholics also differ from Arminians and Lutherans
(i.e. those Protestants who think it is possible to lose salvation) in
the way they think of "mortal sin". But agree that it is possible for
someone who is saved to reject salvation. For Catholics this happens
primarily through mortal sin. Protestants normally do not use this
concept.
Arminius was guarded in the way he answered questions in this
area. However he seems to have held that it is possible for someone
who has been justified to reject salvation. I believe such a person
would be considered to have rejected the faith, and no longer to be a
Christian.
So how does this differ from the Catholic idea of mortal sin? The
objection in the Lutheran documents seems to be that Catholics
separate faith from our relationship to God. Thus mortal sin breaks
our relationship to God, but faith may continue. (If we lost faith as
well, we would have lost the ability to make use of the sacrament of
reconciliation.) This is partly due to the usual difference in how
Protestants and Catholics use the term "faith". For Catholics it has
tended to mean intellectual belief. For Protestants it refers to our
trust in and reliance on God. Protestants don't believe that purely
intellectual faith -- separated from an active trust in God -- has any
religious value.
I am going to have to confess some uncertainty here. However I
think that Arminians and Lutherans tend to differ from Catholics in
that the only sin that they see as truly mortal (i.e. fatal) is
essentially apostasy: a rejection of Christ. As long as faith
remains, it does not matter how serious our sin is: any sin represents
a rejection of God's command, and is sufficient to condemn us; but
Christ's death is sufficient to deal with even the most serious sin.
However at a certain point we may presume that someone has rejected
the faith completely.
The Lutheran Position
I am least certain about this section of the document, because I
find it hard to make sense of the Lutheran position. Note by the way
that I'm speaking of the Lutheran confessional documents, not Luther
personally. Luther was close to Calvin on the topic of
predestination. There are some differences between Luther and later
Lutherans.
The main problem is that the Lutheran confessional documents make
assertions that appear to be in conflict. Futhermore, they do not try
to resolve the conflict, because they believe that doing so would
require going beyond what God has revealed to us.
The starting perspective is similar to Calvinism. Due to the
fall, we are powerless to do anything related to salvation. It's not
enough for God to offer us salvation. He has to work in us even to
get to the point where we can listen to the offer. Just as Calvin,
the Formula of Concord says that those who are saved are elected by
God. God establishes all the means needed to redeem the elect. He
doesn't just forsee their decision, but does what is needed to bring
about their salvation. This is done primarily through preaching the
Gospel and the sacraments. "In this his eternal counsel, purpose, and
ordinance, God has not only prepared salvation in general, but he has
also graciously considered and elected to salvation each and every
individual among the elect who are to be saved through Christ, and
also ordained that ... he wills by his grace, gifts, and effective
working to bring them to salvation, and to help, further, strengthen
and preserve them to this end."
God only foresees the fate of the rest. There is no negative
election. Those who reject the Gospel are responsible for their own
fate.
God wants all to be saved. The offer of the Gospel is seriously
made to all.
Before justification, we do not have the ability to do anything
towards our salvation. Justification is done entirely by God, through
his election of us in Christ. However justification renews our will.
At this point the possibility exists either to continue in faith or to
reject it. That is, it is possible to be justified and then fall away.
God does foreknow who of those called will believe, who will
persevere, and of those who fall away, who will return. In sum, God
knows who will be saved and who will not. However he has not revealed
this to us, and we are not free to speculate on it.
There are some logical problems in maintaining all of these at the
same time. Lutherans are aware of this. They feel bound to assert
that election is only positive, that God wants everyone to be saved,
but that God's plan includes everything that happens, good and
bad.
I believe that Calvinism properly explained is consistent with
many of these points. Calvin also acknowleges that God works
differently with the elect and others. There's no negative form of
regeneration. So on the level of how God works with people, he
regenerates those who he will save; the rest are lost because of their
own sin. God becomes equally responsible for both only when you look
at his plan. But that's the level that the Lutherans consider God's
secret counsel and refuse to talk about. Thus the emphasis on
predestination being entirely positive makes sense.
I think the idea that some may fall away after justification can
be understood as well. Calvin maintains that election is
irreversible. You can't fall away from being elect. Yet he
recognizes that on a human level there are people who give every
appearance of being saved, but fall away. He would maintain that they
weren't really elect, nor were they actually justified. They had the
appearance of faith but not its reality. But this distinction is
really on the level of God's plan. He knows who the real elect are.
The Lutherans refuse to talk on that level. If you look at things in
visible terms, such people believe the Gospel, and then later fall
away. So as long as we are explicitly not dealing with God's secret
plan, it may make sense to speak of them as being justified and then
lost.
However there may be at least some theological difference here.
The Lutheran position would seem to attribute more power to human will
after justification than Calvin would. (Both agree that before
justification, the will is completely in bondage to sin. Thus it is
basically powerless as far as doing anything involving God.)
The statement that God wants everyone to be saved seems harder to
deal with though. In an Arminian this makes sense. But for
Lutherans, people are saved only when God elects them and sets up the
means to bring them to faith. So what can it mean to say that God
actually wants everyone to be saved? If he wants everyone to be
saved, and salvation is entirely up to his election, why isn't
everyone saved? The Lutheran answer is clearly: this is part of the
God's hidden counsel, so we can have nothing to say.
At the start of this document I said that there are two
approaches to reconciling human responsibility with God's
overall responsibility for history. One approach sees these
two issues as being on two different levels. This is the
approach of Calvin and Aquinas. The other approach sees
God's grace and human will as combining to produce a result.
This is the approach of Arminius and many Catholics.
In terms of this dicotomy, I think the Lutherans are on the side
of Calvin and Aquinas. Indeed they separate the levels of explanation
more radically even than Calvin would, to the point of basically
refusing to talk about God's eternal plan.
Analysis: God as Author
So far I've tried to explain the most common positions, but
I haven't given you my evaluation of them.
My basic position is the Calvinist one. I don't see any way to
maintain the standard Christian idea that God is in charge without
saying that ultimately he is responsible for both salvation and
damnation. However I think it's important to realize that this does
not remove human responsibility.
Calvin's discussion goes a long way towards reconciling God's
election and human responsibility. However there's an additional set
of ideas that I'd like to look at. I think it's important how we
think of God's relationship to the world. If we think of
predestination being carried out in a mechanical way, there is little
room for human freedom or responsibility in any but the most abstract
sense. However if we think of God as being more an author than a
watchmaker, I believe it is possible to reconcile God's responsibility
and human responsibility.
When human authors describe their work, it seems clear that they
have to deal with the same sort of issue. They have a story they
want to tell. But the characters take on a life of their own. A good
author will manage to say what they want to say, but also respect the
integrity of their characters.
Thus I suggest that God tells the story that he wants to tell in
the way he wants to tell it, but that he also maintains human
responsibility. Thus the problem of reconciling God's election with
human responsibility is not primarily a doctrinal issue. Rather it is
a matter of a master artist at work.
While I believe God is completely responsible for his story, I
also think that there is room for traditional Christian ideas about
free will. There are things that God will not do, because they would
violate the integrity of one of his characters. It is not that he is
unable to do it, but that as an artist he has chosen to create a
certain kind of story, and that commits him not to write in certain
ways. Yet it remains his story.
Double predestination in its purest form bothers me. Calvin
sometimes gives the impression that God starts out with a list of
people whom he sets out to save and another list of people that he sets
out to damn. This seems to be an oversimplification of his task as an
artist (and a violation of the Scriptural assurance that God wants all
to come to him). That does not mean that I want to save God from
taking responsibility for salvation and damnation -- Like Calvin, I
think God is responsible for both. With the Reformed tradition in
general, I affirm that Christ died, not just to set up the possibility
that some might be saved, but actually to save people. But the two
classic choices for God: that his goal in creation was to save
specific people, or that he simply forsees what choices we will make,
do not either seem to do justice to his artistry.
To return to Calvin's analysis, I'm suggesting that we need to
look at things on two different levels. On the human level (from
inside the story) things make sense on their own. People make
decisions for which they are really responsible. But God is still
responsible for the situation as a whole, and for the overall story.
These two kinds of responsibility are not in competition with each
other. Every action makes sense both in terms of the motivations of
the people involved, and in terms of God's overall plan.
Let's look at situation when someone does something evil.
I believe we need to look primarily to the person who does it.
Christians have sometimes thought that everything bad is a
punishment from God, and have tried to identify something
wrong that we did. I believe this approach was rejected in
the book of Job.
However the evil act is also part of a history over which God has
overall control. God brings good out of evil, and will see to it that
the ultimate result is what he wants, not what the evil person wants.
"God writes straight with crooked lines" (a saying that I've seen
attributed to several different sources). Thus I believe that even
evil actions are part of God's plan. Not that God intended the evil
or its results in themselves, but that he chose to use characters who
he knew would do those things.
I would also suggest that God has two different kinds of
responsibility. One is this general responsibility for history, which
is analogous to the responsibility of an author for his story. The
other is the more direct and personal responsibility which he takes
for those he justifies. Justification is God's decision to engraft us
into Christ and to work within us to regenerate us. Thus his
connection in the lives of his people is direct and personal.
By contrast, his responsibility for the damned is that of the
author. But it does not involve this direct, personal component. God
does not directly inspire people to be evil.
Thus I would suggest that both single and double predestination
are appropriate ways to look at things, but in slightly different
areas. Single predestination reflects the way God works with people:
he works directly with those who are justified, but simply passes over
the rest. There is an asymmetry here. Double predestination reflects
God's responsibility as an author: he is responsible for the final
results. Even the evil end up doing his will, although not
intentionally.
SPECIAL ISSUES:
Can You Be Sure?
Some of the major debates about salvation center around the
question "Can I be sure I'm saved?" First, some caveats. The
question is about me, not anyone else. All Christians agree that it's
impossible to be sure whether someone else is saved. You may have
fairly good evidence. Christ said you will know his followers by the
fruit that they bear. In a few cases there may be essentially no
doubt. But most commonly, we simply can't be sure. And we should be
happy to leave such decisions up to God.
Second, note that the question is about me, not about God.
Everyone agrees that when we accept Christ as Lord, we will be saved.
There are some practical issues, as we'll see. But the question is
never about whether God will accept us.
Finally, let me note that this is primarily an issue for
Protestants. One can ask the question of Catholic theology, but it
isn't a major theme of Catholic theology, and Catholics don't
generally seem to have worried about it seriously. So for the
purposes of this section I'm writing primarily from a Protestant
perspective.
OK, now let's look at the question in more detail.
From the Catholic perspective, it should be possible to tell that
you're saved now, but probably not whether you will end up in heaven.
Catholic doctrine is fairly straightforward about what you need to do
to be saved. There are additional opportunities, so that it is
possible that a pagan might be saved. But for a normal Christian
there are pretty clear sufficient conditions: be baptized, make use of
the means of grace supplied by the Church (e.g. going to Mass
regularly), and use the sacrament of reconciliation to receive
forgiveness for sins when you fall back.
Protestants often attack this answer, based on Luther's
experience. He could never get any peace, because he could never be
sure he had met the requirements. Did he remember every sin he had
committed? Was he sufficiently sincere in repenting them? But his
confessor thought he was being unreasonable in this, and I think
that's the typical Catholic reaction. God never required absolute
perfection, but primarily required the proper intention and doing
whatever was reasonably possible.
The more serious problem from a Catholic point of view is whether
we can now be confident that we are going to be saved in the end. The
answer to that is no. We can't be certain now that we won't at some
time in the future commit a mortal sin and die before we can repent,
or even that we won't completely abandon the faith. Thus Trent is
very clear: we can't be sure we will finally be saved, without some
special revelation from God.
For classical Protestantism things are more interesting. One of
the standard doctrines is "perseverance of the saints". That is, if
someone is truly justified, they will stay that way. This is an
obvious result of the Protestant idea of justification, as explained
above. God justifies us before we are able to respond. Justification
is a permanent relationship.
Luther and Calvin both accepted predestination. (Note however
that modern Lutherans accept it only in a very qualified sense.) Thus
God "elected" certain people to be saved, and justified them,
engrafting them into Christ and starting the process of sanctifying
them. Their status before God rested on God's decision to save them,
not on anything they did. Thus justification and salvation are
permanent.
It seemed to Luther and Calvin that this was a major source of
assurance to Christians. Because salvation depended entirely upon
God, we did not have to worry whether we had been sufficiently
complete or sincere in our response. Because of their understanding
of the severity of sin, the Reformers felt that no one could rely on
salvation if it depended upon us. They felt safe in relying on God.
Unfortunately there's a practical problem. You can be sure that
if you have ever been justified, you will continue to be. But there's
no entirely safe way to know whether you are justified in the first
place, i.e. whether you are one of the elect that God has chosen to
save. Certainly anyone who has a real faith will in fact be saved.
But we know from practical experience that people may appear to have
saving faith when in fact they don't. They may have been carried away
by some religious enthusiasm, or they may only have the appearance of
justifying faith, without the reality. A real justifying faith is
only possible as a gift from God, and there's no clear way to tell
whether this has happened.
These issues did not seem to bother either Luther or Calvin. They
acknowledged the possibility of illusory faith, but they and most of
their followers did not seem overly bothered by that possibility.
However their later followers were not so fortunate. Particularly
in Calvinism, developing confidence that you are among the "elect"
became one of the biggest practical problems for Protestants. This
was the Protestant equivalent of Luther's uncertainty.
If you ask for evidence that you're saved, the only sensible
answer was the one that Jesus gave: you could tell that you were one
of Jesus' followers because of the fruit you bore. While this didn't
exactly make salvation dependent upon good works, it made any
confidence in salvation dependent upon good works. The result was
that from a practical point of view people focused their attention on
their own works, not on Christ. The Reformation ideas had thus been
turned on their head.
Assurance of salvation is an important Reformation idea. But the
original point was that assurance came from our confidence in God.
Justification by faith made sense existentially because the Reformers
felt they could have confidence in God's intention to save them, where
they couldn't have confidence in their own proper performance of what
the Catholic system required of them.
My conclusion from all of this is that assurance of salvation is
real, but somewhat elusive. It doesn't appear to be something that we
can go after independently. That is, there is no test for being saved
that will always give the right answer, even when employed by those
who are not saved. This should not be a surprise: without God's help
we are unable to understand our spiritual situation accurately. We
need his assistance even to grasp the reality of sin. So those who
don't have this help are going to assess their condition incorrectly.
There is no test we can set up that will prevent that.
I believe assurance is real, but that valid assurance occurs only
in the context of an ongoing relationship with God. Consider a normal
human relationship. When I love someone, whether a parent or spouse, I
am willing to rely on that person. My confidence in them is a basic
part of my relationship with them. However it would be very hard to
prove in any objective way that the confidence is justified. People
do sometimes love people who do not return their commitment.
Furthermore, requiring external proofs would be a sure way to poison
the relationship.
Thus I believe the Reformers were right that in our relationship
with God we can trust him to save us. We should be able to have
confidence in this. But we have to realize that others may have a
similar confidence and be wrong. Any attempt to produce proofs of our
salvation is likely to be self-defeating.
Assurance in our relationship with God is just like trust in a
human relationship. You can trust God for your salvation. As long as
you do this in the context of a relationship with God, the result in
helpful. As soon as you ask for objective proofs, outside of your
personal relationship, the question becomes self-defeating.
Can You Be Sure?: Once Saved, always Saved
The discussion so far has applied to the Calvinist position,
and possibly with some qualifications to Lutherans. However
some Baptists also hold a variant of this. It's often called
"Once saved, always saved".
Baptists were originally Calvinists. However most modern
Baptists (at least in the U.S.) are not. It seems likely that
"once saved, always saved" entered the Baptist tradition through
Calvinism. However it continues even among Baptists who are
Arminian.
"Once saved, always saved" has a rather different implication in
an Arminian setting than in a Calvinist setting. For Calvinists,
assurance of salvation is one implication of the doctrine of election.
God chooses people to be saved. He sees to it that their faith
perseveres to the end. For a Calvinist, it makes no sense to talk
about someone who has rejected Christ being saved. If someone has
rejected Christ, then they are not one of God's children. They may
have appeared to be saved, but it was just religious enthusiasm.
But for non-Calvinist Baptists, "once saved, always saved" is
quite different. It means that once you have met the minimal
requirements for salvation, you are in, no matter what you do. A
prototypical presentation of this position is given by Charles Stanley
(a well-known Southern Baptist writer), in "Eternal Security: Can you
be Sure?" In the book, he includes a brief prayer turning your life
over to God. If you pray it sincerely, you are guaranteed to be
saved, no matter what happens with your life later.
This seems appalling to most other Christians, because it seems to
say that God isn't serious about requiring a transformation of our
lives. To avoid this, he maintains that there are levels of honor in
heaven. It is true that you will end up in heaven if you pray his
prayer and do nothing else. But you may find yourself in a very
remote part of heaven, with a very small crown and a very skimpy robe.
You will be eternally frustrated that you didn't take God's demands
more seriously.
How can you preach the Gospel if you believe in predestination?
Predestination means that ultimately God is responsible for who is
saved. While God's grace is offered to everyone, only those who he
regenerates are able to take advantage of it. So how can you honestly
say to someone: "Have faith, repent of your sins, and you will be
saved" when you don't know whether God has chosen him or not?
First, we have an explicit authorization from Jesus to preach to
everyone. So there is no question that we are permitted to offer
salvation to everyone. (Indeed we are required to do so.)
Second, when preaching the Gospel it is not necessary to tell each
individual that God has definitely chosen them. All that we need to
say is that Christ has died for his people, and that if the person
repents of his sins and responds in faith, he will be saved.
The fact that God is responsible for the overall story does not
change the fact that people are saved through faith and repentance.
Yes, God knows who will be saved, and at one level he is responsible
for it. He works in us to regenerate us. But God commonly works
through human agents, and the result of his work is human response and
change. It is a privilege to be invited to participate in God's work
of regeneration.
In the Gospel according to John, Jesus uses a metaphor that may be
helpful here. Several times he speaks of himself as a shepherd
calling his sheep. But it's clear that not everyone belongs to his
flock. His sheep recognize his voice. Others do not. When we preach
the Gospel, we are calling in Jesus' name. Those who are Jesus' sheep
will respond. We don't need to know in advance who they are, or how
many they are. We can hope for everyone.
In fact I think it can cause problems if we assume too much
responsibility for the salvation of others. In I Cor 3:6-7, Paul
discusses a similar issue. He points out that he simply sows seeds.
God makes them grow. If we assume that we are responsible for saving
people, we may be led into using overly emotional or coercive
approaches. These can lead to the appearance of success, but their
long-range effect is questionable.